Jamaica in 1850

Jamaica in 1850
by John Bigelow
Adopted by
Richard W. Renner and Jackie Vossler
In honor of Leslie K. Overstreet of the Cullman Library
on November 28, 2017
Title page of Jamaica in 1850

Jamaica in 1850, or, The effects of sixteen years of freedom on a slave colony

By John Bigelow. New York & London: G.P. Putnam, 1851.

John Bigelow (1817-1911), born into a prominent New England family, was a newspaper writer and editor at the New-York Evening Post, under the leadership of William Cullen Bryant. An opponent of slavery in the years leading up to the Civil War, Bigelow travelled to Jamaica in 1850 to study the island’s economics following the abolition of slavery. His book soundly repudiated the assertion that freed slaves were incapable of self-governance and is still considered an authoritative analysis. It has been reprinted more than once in modern times, but this is the original publication. Our copy of the book is bound in the original publisher’s blue cloth, with blind-stamped covers and gilt-tooling on the spine.

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Adoption Type: Build and Access the Collection